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24. (5/17) MUSIC IN THE 1680S
1. Corelli, Trio Sonata op. 3 no. 2 in D major (mvmts 1–2)
a. Instrumental Music
i. String / Violin family
ii. Mantua, Cremona, Bescia — centers for violin making.
iii. Differences between Baroque instruments and modern / Baroque performance and
modern (bow, strings, fingerboard, vibrato, doubling)
b. Corelli Biography
i. 1653–1713
ii. Violinist(!) who trained in Bologna but moved to Rome.
iii. First composer to have a reputation purely from instrumental music.
iv. Six publications, but each has many works.
v. Works would become especially important in England(!)
c. Components of a trio sonata
i. Instruments
1. Note on four­voice edition: uggh!
ii. Trio sonata style
iii. Sonatas da chiesa (church) and sonatas da camera (chamber)
iv. Dance­like movements vs. tempo markings – which is which?
v. Which type of sonata is op. 3 no. 2?
vi. Generally four movements, slow/fast/slow/fast.
vii. Most movements (esp. fast) tend to have two sections: the first moves to the domi­
nant, the second to the tonic (beginnings of binary form).
viii. Movement 1: Walking bass, suspension chains (mm. 6–7, and 11–12).
ix. Movement 2: imitation with inversion.
d. Related genres by Corelli: Concerto Grosso
2. Elizabeth­Claude Jacquet de la Guerre, Suite no. 3 in a­minor, 1. Prelude, 2. Allemande
a. Biography
i. ca. 1665–1729, from the Jacquets, a family of musicians
ii. prodigy: played harpsichord for the king of France at age 5.
iii. Composer of opera, sacred pieces, cantate française (including “Jepthé”), and works
for keyboard.
iv. Melodic writing is important in her keyboard pieces (some are pièces de clavecin qui
peuvent se jouer sul le viollon)
v. A posthumous medallion calls her one of the great composers of her time.
b. Suite
i. Unmeasured prelude
ii. Shows analytical thinking in composition
iii. Perhaps allows for more improvisation than this performance
iv. Abundance of ornaments (agréments) – used for important, long notes
v. Following prelude comes a set of dances
vi. Allemande (Fr. = “German”): Stylized dance; always begins with upbeat.
vii. Notes inegales
viii. style brisé (broken) ou style luthé (lute)
2
3. Jean­Baptiste Lully, Armide, “Enfin il est en ma puissance,” “Finally, he’s in my power”
a. Giovanni Battista Lulli (1632–1687), born in Flornece, but flourished under the court of
Louis XIV in France
b. Controlled the Académie royale de musique, which encouraged the development of French
opera (called tragédie lyrique).
c. No castrati in French opera, but many dance scenes(!) taken from the rich new French ballet
traditions. Longer, usually five acts. Libretti usually praise the king through allegory.
d. Armide: story of a sorceress in the Holy Land during the First Crusade who is smitten by the
Renaud most heroic of the crusaders, whom she is trying to kill.
e. Overture: French with a “Lully” orchestra: five parts (vln 1&2, vla 1&2, bc)
f. In “Enfin il est en ma puissance,” she is trying to decide if she will kill Renaud in his sleep.
Begins with récitatif simple or ordinaire, which is a contradiction in terms, since it is huge in
range and unusual in other ways, with many changes of pace and fluid meter. Finishes with a
more conventional air (aria) but with continuo alone.
4. Henry Purcell, Dido and Aeneas, “Thy Hand Belinda…When I am laid to rest”
a. Purcell (1659–1695), one of the great composers for the English language. Early career as a
singer.
b. English did not like continuously sung opera; spoken drama was always particularly strong in
England. However, spoken drama did not allow actresses (at least until 1660), so sung thea­
ter was where women’s participation was paramount.
c. masques were common, and mixed dancing, music, and drama to tell an allegory. (Like
French traditions, usually also in praise of the ruling powers).
d. Two major dramatic works: The Fairy Queen and Dido and Aeneas (1689)
e. D&A : First (known) performance at a school for girls in Chelsea (suburb of London). Each
year, the girls of the school put on one stage production, so this was the one for 1689. Dido
lasts only an hour (still often performed in schools and universities).
f. Libretto by Nahum Tate, considered one of the great writers of the time (now vilified as the
guy who rewrote Shakespeare’s King Lear to remove the “flaws” and “boring parts.”)
g. We know that all the roles except Aeneas were sung by women; some by imported profes­
sionals. However, the earliest scores (from the 1770s!) have many men’s parts in the chorus;
possibly a later (or earlier?) arrangement.
h. Story from Virgil (the Aeneid), tells story of Aeneas abandoning Dido, the queen of Car­
thage.
i. Final scene: recitative, Thy hand belinda, and Dido’s lament: When I am laid in early, may my
wrongs create no trouble in thy breast; Remember me, but ah! forget my fate. Dido dies and cu­
pids scatter petals upon her grave with drooping wings.1
j. Slow aria, with repeated ground bass using the descending chromatic tetrachord.
5. 700–1700: One thousand years of music.
1
Note the word painting of drooping.